St. Patrick’s Day is Uniswap Day for Gaming Startup, Lepricon
Reading Time: 4min read
There is a new game in town, and it seems to have the luck of the Irish, especially as they will list their token on Uniswap on St. Patrick’s day.
Choosing such a lucky date to debut might explain why the team behind Lepricon, a blockchain-based gaming platform for prediction games, found themselves closing out their seed and private rounds in just a few short days, ending the process seven times oversubscribed,
“Once word started getting around about what we were doing and why we found ourselves inundated in instant messages and emails from potential investors,” recounts Stephen Browne, Co-Founder & COO.
Reading Time: 2min read
Hong Kong – March 08, 2021 – Lepricon Technologies, a community-governed prediction games platform, announced that it had closed all seed and private token rounds and that the total amount of tokens applied was seven times that which was available. Lepricon also announced the dates for their two upcoming public token sales and planned listing on Uniswap.
The public sale dates are:
MANTRA DAOs ZENDIT Launchpad on Monday, March 15th, 2021, at 1 pm UTC
Duck DAO’s DuckSTARTER on Wednesday, March 17th, 2021, at 2 pm UTC
Lepricon’s L3P token will open for trade on Uniswap on Wednesday, March 17th at 5 pm UTC.
‘Progressive’ prosecutors put thousands of lives at risk
By Ted Kelly posted on February 12, 2021
Philadelphia
The novel coronavirus has claimed an unlikely victim in the United States: the Sixth Amendment. The right to a “speedy trial” is in critical condition.
Philadelphia’s county jail population has risen to 4,500 and is growing steadily. Half of those behind bars have “detainers,” meaning they aren’t eligible for bail, often due to prior convictions. Philly courts have a backlog that has surpassed 13,000 cases.
Car caravan demands “free our people” on April 10, 2020 in Philadelphia. Credit: Joe Piette
Thousands of cases on that backlog are scheduled for a hearing in “Room 200” of Philly’s “criminal justice” building in Center City, a courtroom that does not exist. Room 200 is used as a technical work-around to “schedule” hearings that will not take place.